Raped on the Railway

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Raped on the Railway: a True Story of a Lady who was first ravished and then flagellated on the Scotch Express is an anonymous English pornographic story published in 1894 [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] by Charles Carrington [6] under the imprint "Society of Bibliophiles" [7] or "Cosmopolitan Bibliophile Society". [8] The victim, a married woman, is raped by a stranger in a locked railway compartment and, in a trope common in later Victorian pornography, [4] is depicted as ultimately taking pleasure in the act: [8] [9] she is then flagellated by her brother-in-law for the latter transgression. [4] [10]

According to Ronald Pearsall, the story reflects the novel sexual opportunities afforded by railway travel in Victorian England, focused on the erotic opportunities of a male passenger in a railway carriage, who, unusually for the period, finds himself alone with an unchaperoned woman, and the sexual perils of the lady in question who cannot escape from his attentions or summon help from a closed carriage (corridors between carriages being a later innovation). The passage of the train through dark tunnels adds another frisson to the possibility of erotic adventure on the rails. [11]

The plot may also have been inspired by the real-life case of Colonel Valentine Baker, who was convicted of an indecent assault on a young woman in a railway carriage in 1875. [12]

An American adaptation, or plagiarism, was published in New York City under the title Raped on the Elevated Railway, a True Story of a Lady who was First Ravished and then Flagellated on the Uptown Express, illustrating the Perils of Travel in the New Machine Age [7] [10] [13] [14] set in New York. [15]

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Experimental Lecture is an English pornographic book published in 1878 by the pseudonym "Colonel Spanker" for the "Cosmopolitan Society of Bibliophiles", an imprint of Charles Carrington. The Colonel and his circle have a house in Park Lane where genteel young ladies are kidnapped, humiliated, and flagellated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Victorian erotica</span> 19th-century British sexual art and literature

Victorian erotica is a genre of sexual art and literature which emerged in the Victorian era of 19th-century Britain. Victorian erotica emerged as a product of a Victorian sexual culture. The Victorian era was characterized by paradox of rigid morality and anti-sensualism, but also by an obsession with sex. Sex was a main social topic, with progressive and enlightened thought pushing for sexual restriction and repression. Overpopulation was a societal concern for the Victorians, thought to be the cause of famine, disease, and war. To curb the threats of overpopulation and to solve other social issues that were arising at the time, sex was socially regulated and controlled. New sexual categories emerged as a response, defining normal and abnormal sex. Heterosexual sex between married couples became the only form of sex socially and morally permissible. Sexual pleasure and desire beyond heterosexual marriage was labelled as deviant, considered to be sinful and sinister. Such deviant forms included masturbation, homosexuality, prostitution and pornography. Procreation was the primary goal of sex, removing it from the public, and placing it in the domestic. Yet, Victorian anti-sexual attitudes were contradictory of genuine Victorian life, with sex underlying much of the cultural practice. Sex was simultaneously repressed and proliferated. Sex was featured in medical manuals such as The Sexual Impulse by Havelock Ellis and Functions and Disorders of Reproductive Organs by William Acton, and in cultural magazines like The Penny Magazine and The Rambler. Sex was popular in entertainment, with much of Victorian theatre, art and literature including and expressing sexual and sensual themes.

References

  1. Lee Grieveson, Peter Krämer, The Silent Cinema Reader, Routledge, 2004, ISBN   0-415-25284-9, p. 59
  2. Ronald Pearsall (1969) The Worm in the Bud: the world of Victorian sexuality, Macmillan; pp. 321, 364
  3. Peter Mendes, "Clandestine erotic fiction in English, 1800-1930: a bibliographical study", Scolar Press, 1993, ISBN   0-85967-919-5, p. 319
  4. 1 2 3 Alan Norman Bold, "The Sexual Dimension in Literature", Vision Press, 1983, ISBN   0-389-20314-9, pp.94,97,102
  5. Claire Preston, A dictionary of literary terms and literary theory, Wiley-Blackwell, 1998, ISBN   0-631-20271-4, p.688
  6. Rachel Potter, "Obscene Modernism and the Trade in Salacious Books", Modernism/modernity , vol.16, no.1 (January 2009) pp.87-104 doi : 10.1353/mod.0.0065
  7. 1 2 Peter Webb, The erotic arts, Secker & Warburg, 1975, p.200
  8. 1 2 Harald Leupold-Löwenthal, Ein unmöglicher Beruf: über die schöne Kunst, ein Analytiker zu sein Arbeiten zur Psychoanalyse, Böhlau Verlag Wien, 1997, ISBN   3-205-98412-9, p.153
  9. Mark Bracher, Lacan, discourse, and social change: a psychoanalytic cultural criticism, Cornell University Press, 1993, ISBN   0-8014-8063-9, pp.86-87
  10. 1 2 Patricia J. Anderson, When passion reigned: sex and the Victorians, BasicBooks, 1995, ISBN   0-465-08991-7, pp.99-106
  11. Ronald Pearsall (1971) The Worm in the Bud: the world of Victorian sexuality, Penguin; p. 396
  12. Matthew Sweet, Inventing the Victorians, Faber and Faber, 2001, ISBN   978-0-571-20663-6 page 216
  13. Alan Norman Bold, "The Sexual Dimension in Literature", Vision Press, 1983, ISBN   0-389-20314-9, p.97
  14. Howard Whitman, The sex age, Doubleday, 1962, p.64
  15. Kyle-Keith, Richard (1961). The high price of pornography. Public Affairs Press. p. 30.